So at the 4 mo pedi appt the dr mentioned that we may want to consider sleep training as our lo wakes 3 to 6 times a night mostly to be soothed and once to eat. I am not opposed to CIO at all. Currently we put lo in the crib asleep so I think he has difficulty getting back to sleep on his own in the MOTN. Should we buy a sleep training book or rather loosely follow her suggestions? What worked best for you? The temperament of our lo has always been more fussy and high strung to say the least so I'm not sure if sleep training would even work. Thanks ladies.
Re: Sleep training
What's been working for us is a nighttime routine of diaper and jammies followed by a book. Then we lay her down and walk out of the room. Sometimes she just does a mild, whiny complaining cry. For that, we usually don't go in. If she escalates to intense crying, we will go in every 10 min or so to soothe, pat her belly, replace paci. We do not pick up unless she is absolutely inconsolable with no chance of calming down on her own. The time it takes for her to settle down has gradually been decreasing from about an hour when we first started to about 20 min now.
I have noticed in the past week or so that she is beginning to transfer this skill to her night wakings. She usually wakes about an hour after we put her down. We used to have to go soothe her but lately if we wait about 5 minutes, she will put herself back to sleep. That NEVER happened before.
Something that really helped us was a nice battery operated mobile with music and lights. We had a windup one which was just dumb because we had to go in there every 5 min and it sounded like creepy clown music. But she loves the new one we got and it helps her settle.
I got the No Cry Sleep Solution because I wanted to try that before CIO. I wound up not really needing a lot of the tips. DD handled unswaddling like a breeze and isn't having an issue with going down drowsy - which totally surprised me considering I'd been rocking her to complete sleep for almost 4 months. I just started putting her down drowsy this weekend and I'd say 4 out of 5 times it worked. Last night I had to rock her a little past drowsy, but I think she was over tired. Of course this could all change at the drop of a hat.
One of the things No Cry tells you to do is pick a day or two and track baby's sleeping/napping - what time, how long, where baby slept and what you had to do to get baby to sleep. Then you can start to see if baby has their own patterns or if certain things help/hurt the sleep process.
https://www.naturalchild.org/advice/q09.html
I would suggest that if you are going to do a CIO then pick a method and follow all the steps. Sleep training is about getting them to fall asleep on their own, not about cutting out all MOTN feedings.
As PP suggested, wait until the regression is over as well.
They didn't do CIO, they followed her sleepy cues and had to act quickly before she became overtired (and that was easily within minutes). They put her in her crib drowsy, after a quick 10min "routine": diaper, pj, story, kiss goodnight and lights out. Once they did that around 7 months, she started sleeping in 5 hour stretches at night (so 10 hours overall). A month later she slept 9 hours every night. Never went to bed at a set time, just followed her cues. Eventually, and to this day at 20 months, 7pm is her bedtime.
I don't believe in CIO, and I guess part of the reason why is I was blessed with a great sleeper. Still, I believe babies are meant to learn on their own time, and parents are meant to answer their needs. It can't be easy, I feel for you, but hang in there! I know that first night DS slept 8 hours I thought it was a fluke, but it kept happening and it will for you too!
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Rhys - born 04.17.2013
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I highly recommend that you get the books and read them (it was easier for me on the kindle). That's the only way you will fully understand the theories and concepts necessary to make the techniques work. Sleep training isn't formulaic, you need to use some intuition, which you learn by reading the actual books.
Our LO started self-soothing around 2.5 months, and sleeping through the night. Prior to that, I attended to every peep he made, and I think I might have actually been keeping him from getting more sleep than he would if I wasn't arousing him fully by soothing him, in addition to causing myself pretty severe sleep deprivation (hubby is deployed, and I'm the sole caregiver at night). Once I started deciphering between real crying and little whines, everything changed. We also got into a routine where I feed him his final bottle, then put him down drowsy on a nightly schedule, and he knows that's sleep time and will only fuss for a couple minutes, if at all.
The only downside is that he now prefers sleeping in his crib or P&P versus being held and sleep snuggling. I know I'm incredibly lucky, though, so I certainly don't complain.